by The4thCircle » Dec 7th, '11, 01:05
So I'm back. I'd say in terms of performance I did about 40% of what I seem to be able to pull off flawlessly in practice (always the way...)
So the plan was to do a rope routine, but with a bead garland (I tried tinsel but it falls apart) for a christmas feel.
It should have been quite simple, 3 impossible knots with some patter about christmas decorations getting tangled too easily, cut and restore to lead into a little bit of the fibre optics ends and middle routine, and then finish it with a setup for a middle removal, but use it as a second cut and restore, this time a 'cleaner' one without all that odd looping.
So the opening was meant to go
Open box with long bead garland, unravel, cut a length. Even this part went wrong when I couldn't find the end and had to untwist a piece of wire holding them together.
The first intended line was I was going to do this with tinsel, but it keeps getting knotted up" And immediately do a lightning knot.
This went well, lightning knot formed perfectly.
However, bead garlands move in such a way that the knots are hard to see. As such when they noticed it, with me pretending that the knot had happened by accident, assumed it had been there all along.
Second, hunters puzzle knot. This is a clearer display of an impossible knot because there's a lot of twisting involved. However on the final move the beads snagged together and they knotted with a loop which wouldn't then undo. I hurled the rope aside, pulled a new length of beads and cut it off, to realise it wasn't long enough, discarded that, handed the scissors to someone else and asked them to cut it, so I could better judge the right length.
Of course, having to discard a piece that was too short left me with no real premise or patter for why I was about to cut this length in two. I don't even remember what I said.
I left them with the scissors for the cut & restore, which went well. Used the simple method with the ends in the left hand, right hand pulls up the hanging loop and adds an unseen twist.
When the cut was made I held them out and said "Well at least they didn't knot together this time... although they aren't quite the same length." at which point I grabbed one of the dangling ends, brought it to the top and revealed the rope to be once again whole.
First applause. Finally, applause.
Interestingly I totally forgot the rest of what I said. It's lost to the mists of time now as I put the ends together, pulled them to one side and transposed them to the other. It went well but my taking the ends back to my starting position was sloppy. Not sure if anyone saw it.
This was the third time I had to brush my hair out of my eyes. I really must come up with a better way of dealing with that.
I then took the ends off completely and placed them in my mouth to do some endless loop moves. Normally I wouldn't put them in my mouth for those moves, but my usual pocket had a hole in it and I couldn't stand the idea of losing my short piece and having to think around it again.
When the ends went back on, "I said come on lets cut it for real this time." as I placed my short loop in the middle, where I instructed my scissor man to cut it. I then asked him to cut the ends off. When I'd practiced this i imagined fevered snipping, allowing me to discard my last bits. In hindsight I should have asked him to give me the scissors to complete that part, because he wasn't cutting fast enough (presumably because he didn't realise at least 60% of my frenetic manner was intended) the ends I was hoping to discard in a flurry of snips simply fell out quite visibly, but probably only he saw it.
I then totally forgot to leave any sort of pause before revealing the restore, which was meant to be my big finish.
So I suppose what I really showed was that it hadn't actually been cut. Which was a bit of an anticlimax in hindsight.
I was the last act of the evening. Luckily it was a low turn out.
I will say however, despite everything having gone wrong, I feel like I am now sort of more accepted there, simply because I have now performed, so they know I'm at least trying.
Yeah. Not great, but not terrible.
And with every performance I learn about 20 things I could have done better, which improves my handling in the long run. I should beat the fear more often.
-Stacy